Bloomberg: Puerto Rico Beyond IRS Reach

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Puerto Rico Beyond IRS Reach Woos Paulson-Sized Fortunes - Bloomberg

Puerto Rico occupies a space between foreign and domestic status with U.S. citizenship for residents, its own Olympic team and a tax system that allows individuals and companies the chance to elude the IRS.

The U.S. territory’s leaders are seeking to lure mainland residents such as hedge-fund billionaire John Paulson. Moving to Puerto Rico could allow Paulson and other top-earning taxpayers to shield future income from the Internal Revenue Service without giving up their passports.

Puerto Rico, eager for economic growth, is making an unusually direct pitch to wealthy Americans that risks a political backlash from Congress, said John Buckley, a former tax counsel for Democrats on the House Ways and Means Committee.

“They’re walking a fine line,” Buckley said. “This would be the first time that Puerto Rico would kind of deliberately erode the U.S. tax base for individuals.”

Already, 10 Americans have taken advantage of a year-old Puerto Rico law that lets them avoid local and U.S. capital gains taxes by signing agreements with the territory’s government. Paulson, a 57-year-old New Yorker, is considering such a move, according to four people who have spoken with him about it, Bloomberg News reported March 11.

The law was designed to promote investment in the island territory. The unemployment rate there was 14 percent in December 2012, compared with 10.2 percent in Nevada and Rhode Island, the states with the highest unemployment, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Puerto Rico’s gross domestic product per capita in 2010 was $16,300, about the same as Botswana or Belarus, according to the CIA World Factbook.

Lost Manufacturing

Puerto Rico wants to diversify its economy, which has lost some of its manufacturing base to low-wage countries such as the Dominican Republic and China, said Gabriel Hernandez, one of the framers of the Puerto Rican tax law and head of the tax division of BDO Puerto Rico PSC.

“It’s our reaction to what happened, that the world got more connected,” said Hernandez, who likened the effort to tax incentives used by states to lure businesses.

The U.S., he said, should embrace “the whole concept of trying to make our economy more independent or more stable or more self-reliant.”
The law takes advantage of the longstanding interaction between the tax codes of the U.S. and Puerto Rico. Under laws previously passed by Congress, all income earned in Puerto Rico by island residents is exempt from U.S. taxation. Residents still owe the IRS taxes on any U.S. income.

Untaxed Income

By moving to Puerto Rico, wealthy Americans can transform potential U.S. capital gains income taxed at up to 23.8 percent into untaxed Puerto Rican income. They must meet residency tests, including spending 183 days a year in Puerto Rico and having social and personal connections on the island.

By contrast, renouncing U.S. citizenship by moving to another country is much more punitive for wealthy taxpayers. They must surrender their U.S. passports and pay an exit tax on the value of unrealized capital gains. As a simplified example, someone giving up citizenship who has $100 million in untaxed stock gains could pay $23.8 million upon departure.

Even with potential tax advantages, Paulson and others considering a move to Puerto Rico should be wary, said Argeo Quinones Perez, a professor of economics at the University of Puerto Rico’s Rio Piedras campus.

‘Third-World Environment’

“For people as wealthy as Mr. Paulson and the like, spending half a year in this provincial, third-world environment would be like spending half a year in minimum-security prison,” he said in an e-mail. “The tax breaks Mr. Paulson and other people and entities enjoy in this fiscal paradise are at the heart of the long-term fiscal crisis and economic stagnation we suffer.”

Puerto Rico, which has a population of about 4 million and is smaller geographically than Connecticut, has been a part of the U.S. since the Spanish-American War in 1898. The commonwealth has a non-voting resident commissioner, Pedro Pierluisi, who represents residents in Congress and caucuses with House Democrats.

In an interview yesterday, Pierluisi blamed Puerto Rico’s unresolved status between statehood and independence. As a state, he said, Puerto Rico would get more federal funding, which would be an acceptable tradeoff for bringing residents’ income under the federal income tax. Residents and employers do pay federal payroll taxes.

Mirror Code

“Short of statehood, this is what you do,” he said, adding that a struggling Puerto Rico economy just encourages migration in the opposite direction, to Florida, Texas and North and South Carolina.

Puerto Rico’s separate tax system makes it different from several other U.S. territories. Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the Northern Mariana Islands all use what is called a “mirror code,” in which they use the U.S. tax code and substitute the name of the territory each time the law says United States. The District of Columbia is treated generally like a state for tax purposes.

The Virgin Islands attempted to lure hedge-fund managers more than a decade ago, using authority Congress granted the territory to encourage economic development.

That effort fizzled after Congress changed the law in 2004 to make it more difficult to recharacterize U.S. income as island-based, and the IRS began auditing more aggressively.

Harmonizing Rules

Puerto Rico’s attempts to lure U.S. taxpayers could draw more scrutiny of taxation in the territories, which hasn’t received much attention lately, said Senator Charles Grassley, former chairman of the Finance Committee, who led the effort against the Virgin Islands maneuvers.

“Harmonizing the tax rules of the territories could be something to look at if Congress and the president undertake comprehensive tax reform,” the Iowa Republican said in an e- mailed statement this week. “Or if Puerto Rico maintains a separate tax system, that could be conditioned on accepting certain rules to prevent tax evasion.”

The hybrid system of Puerto Rican taxation has implications for companies, too. Until 2006, the U.S. offered companies a credit against U.S. income taxes for investments in the territories. Companies also have access to the U.S. market, patent protection and the U.S. legal system, Hernandez said.

After that break expired, companies restructured their Puerto Rican operations to take advantage of the fact that it’s considered a foreign jurisdiction for tax purposes.

Companies such as Amgen Inc., Pfizer Inc. (PFE) and Microsoft Corp. receive local tax benefits from their operations on the island, according to regulatory filings. As with profits in another country, the companies can earn and leave money in Puerto Rico without paying U.S. corporate income taxes.

“The same thing that Paulson is getting, corporations are getting in the manufacturing sector,” Pierluisi said.
At a hearing last year, Senator Carl Levin, a Michigan Democrat, said Microsoft’s method of routing profits through Puerto Rico saved the company $4.5 billion over three years.

Bill Sample, the company’s corporate vice president for worldwide tax, testified at the hearing that Microsoft follows all tax laws.

For U.S. lawmakers concerned about the budget deficit, the Puerto Rico law could be a boon, said Buckley, who now teaches tax law at Georgetown University in Washington. A legislative attempt to prevent Paulson and others from tax-free moves to Puerto Rico could generate revenue for the U.S. Treasury.

“You could get a score here,” Buckley said, “And I doubt a lot of people are going to stand up and defend him.”
 


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“The tax breaks Mr. Paulson and other people and entities enjoy in this fiscal paradise are at the heart of the long-term fiscal crisis and economic stagnation we suffer.”
 
“The tax breaks Mr. Paulson and other people and entities enjoy in this fiscal paradise are at the heart of the long-term fiscal crisis and economic stagnation we suffer.”

Well of course, it has nothing to do with the economic downturn following the global financial crises they created. Nothing like propaganda to support their agenda, to demonize the tax exiles when it's been going on forever.

Tax exile - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
It's almost tax season

:party-smiley-004:

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92B8713i_YY]Why's Puerto Rico's Attractive as a Tax Haven - YouTube[/ame]
 
“The tax breaks Mr. Paulson and other people and entities enjoy in this fiscal paradise are at the heart of the long-term fiscal crisis and economic stagnation we suffer.”

Thought this was a new thread, was about to quote this exact part of the article. Good thinking, mattseh!
 
Fuck the IRS! Puerto Rico FTW!

They should just tell the US to fuck off before they end up becoming an actual state instead of just US Territory.
 
Nice try IRS!

Convince the PR government to push this agenda. Have lots of wealthy companies and people go there instead of the typical offshore locations. Wait a few years to get a big pool of them. Then change the law/incorporate them as a state. The IRS gets allllllll that money.
 
Singapore model sounds good for Puerto Rico, all small (semi)western nations should go that way instead of trying to integrate into the failing US and EU.

Estonia is also getting a lot of critisism for their 0% corporate tax rate (24% capital gains only), but it has meant that both Skype and Microsoft and a whole lot of other companies settle down there.

Personally, I don't think Americans should be too dissatified with their capital gains code, which is much lower than many european countries where capital gain tax approaches 50%. Some european countries are almost communist in their idea that earning money from owning capital is evil and should be heavily taxed.

Corporate taxation is much worse for business development. There is zero rationality for it, since all corporate money will eventually be taxed when used.
 
The irony is that the IRS itself is a Puerto Rican corporation.

I've seen this (or that the IRS is a Delaware corp) posted on conspiracy sites, but never been able to track down Articles of Incorporation that prove it. Nothing beyond obscure legal rulings from district judges or dissenting opinions. I gotta believe if the IRS was a Puerto Rico corporation someone would be able to get a copy of the Articles of Incorporation, annual filings or something...
 
I've seen this (or that the IRS is a Delaware corp) posted on conspiracy sites, but never been able to track down Articles of Incorporation that prove it. Nothing beyond obscure legal rulings from district judges or dissenting opinions. I gotta believe if the IRS was a Puerto Rico corporation someone would be able to get a copy of the Articles of Incorporation, annual filings or something...

Agreed. But you know they're not going to come out and admit it or make it easy to find. Just like with the Fed the ownership is completely obscure and hard to track down. If you look up the ownership of the Fed through the government or even Wikipedia it will give you a BS answer. And we know the Fed and IRS work closely together and were set up the way they are today around roughly the same time by, dare I say, roughly the same people.
 
Agreed. But you know they're not going to come out and admit it or make it easy to find. Just like with the Fed the ownership is completely obscure and hard to track down. If you look up the ownership of the Fed through the government or even Wikipedia it will give you a BS answer. And we know the Fed and IRS work closely together and were set up the way they are today around roughly the same time by, dare I say, roughly the same people.

What I mean is, there are people making $30k/year working in the department that would have those records on file. It would not cost much to get someone to smuggle out a photocopy of something that would literally change the entire tax system of the United States. Since nothing like that has happened, I kinda find that hard to believe.
 
this is a weak attempt and as someone mentioned would be agreat way to pool people and change the laws..

you need to set up your corporate tax self in countries that do NOT kiss U.S. ass.. like hong kong.